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Plant Physiology 1990-Nov

Purification of a beta-Amylase that Accumulates in Arabidopsis thaliana Mutants Defective in Starch Metabolism.

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J D Monroe
J Preiss

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Amylase activity is elevated 5- to 10-fold in leaves of several different Arabidopsis thaliana mutants defective in starch metabolism when they are grown under a 12-hour photoperiod. Activity is also increased when plants are grown under higher light intensity. It was previously determined that the elevated activity was an extrachloroplastic beta-(exo)amylase. Due to the location of this enzyme outside the chloroplast, its function is not known. The enzyme was purified to homogeneity from leaves of both a starchless mutant deficient in plastid phosphoglucomutase and from the wild type using polyethylene glycol fractionation and cyclohexaamylose affinity chromatography. The molecular mass of the beta-amylase from both sources was 55,000 daltons as determined by denaturing gel electrophoresis. Gel filtration studies indicated that the enzyme was a monomer. The specific activities of the purified protein from mutant and wild-type sources, their substrate specificities, and K(m) for amylopectin were identical. Based on these results it was concluded that the mutant contained an increased level of beta-amylase protein. Enzyme neutralization studies using a polyclonal antiserum raised to purified beta-amylase showed that in each of two starchless mutants, one starch deficient mutant and one starch overproducing mutant, the elevated amylase activity was due to elevated beta-amylase protein.

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